American Politics Has a Fame Problem

U.S. political candidates come from a system of sustained banality and half knowledge

August 29, 2011 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (11)

Louis René Beres is the author of many books and articles dealing with international relations and international law and is a professor at Purdue.

In Plato's Republic, a canonic centerpiece of all Western thought, we first read of the "philosopher king," a visionary leader who would impressively combine deep learning with effective governance. Today, almost 2,400 years later, such leadership is nowhere to be found, either in Washington or in any other major world capital. Here in the United States, we seemingly remain content with criteria of presidential selection that emphasize anything but cultivated insights or real wisdom. To the contrary, and despite an endless litany of past failures, we still measure our candidates according to their abundantly vague promises, and embarrassingly empty witticisms.

The "Plato problem" exists in all spheres of American electoral politics, not "only" at the level of the presidency. Stubbornly, 'We the people' are willing to reduce all serious political judgments to a crass assortment of numbing clichés and visceral ideologies.

The story is told of an admiring friend who charms a young mother, "My, that's a beautiful baby you have there." The mother replies, "Oh, that's nothing--you should see his photograph." In this obviously weird colloquy, lies a sorely bitter truth.

Routinely, in all politics, we Americans are presented not with authentic individuals, but with choreographed reproductions. Inevitably, to our chagrin, we discover that these carefully touched up images disguise a multitude of virulent pathologies. In a stunning if unwitting misunderstanding of Plato's thought, which explicitly emphasizes the core reality of ideas, most Americans now fully accept this very odd substitution of image for reality.

Everywhere, even in politics, fame can be concocted or synthetic. Typically, in politics, it matters little if a particular candidate has any notably intrinsic worth or genuine promise. What really counts, over time, is simply that the public will be impressed by this aspirant because he or she is suitably recognizable. Again and again, in a plainly perverse tribute to the corollary power of the image-makers, even the most blatant nincompoop has been transformed into a viable candidate.

In American politics, no one any longer expects what Ralph Waldo Emerson had once called "high thinking." Rather, the celebrity politician draws huge audiences (and donors) although very few would ever expect to hear anything of substance. In our national politics of veneered truths, whenever a candidate's spoken words seethe with vacant allusions and blatant equivocations, the crowd nods approvingly, and leaps with satisfaction.

It is comforting enough for these audiences to bask in the warmth of someone "famous." In the absurd theater of American politics, the key protagonists continue to play their stock parts with contrived zeal and ambition, but also without any true capacity. As for the chorus, we have rehearsed our lines just as well, but we now utter them viscerally, as if by rote. Understandably, our exuberant shouts of approbation lack credibility. After all, they have been reduced to ritual incantations.

The historian Daniel J. Boorstin once wrote knowingly of the "celebrity," of the person or product that is known for well known-ness. Offered as a commodity, the object of celebrity triumphs only because the pervasive alchemy of "public relations." It matters not at all that a public figure may be manifestly without intellect, courage, or integrity. This deficiency is literally of no consequence. [Vote now: Will Obama be a one-term president?]

Many of our national heroes were once created by commendable achievement. Today, the successful politician is fashioned by a system that is refractory to all wisdom, a system that is sustained by banality, empty chatter, and half knowledge. Now, at a time when leadership incapability could pave the way to bioterrorism, "dirty bombs," or even outright nuclear attack, our relentless transformations of politics into amusement has become far more than a mere matter of foolishness or bad taste.

When will we learn to look behind the news, to acknowledge that our fragile political world has been constructed upon ashes? The answer: Not until we learn to take ourselves seriously as persons; not until we begin to read and think with sincerity; not until we stop amusing ourselves to death; not until we seek rapport with genuine feeling; and not until we rediscover the dignified grace of real learning.

As Americans, there can never be any primary salvation for us in politics. Largely because of our disfigured criteria of selection, the American president and other elected high officials, Democrat or Republican, can never be expected to lead. This will change only after core personal meanings in America are finally detached from frenetic marketing, and after we recognize that we are held captive within a demeaning world of manufactured promises and empty appearances. Hopefully, of course, it will change before such time, as H.L. Mencken once observed, when a distinctly higher authority, "tired of the farce at last, obliterates the entire race with one great, final blast of fire, mustard gas and streptococci."

Plato's "philosopher king" may not be a practicable standard for American electoral politics, but it surely can't hurt to keep such a potentially enviable measure somewhere in mind. At a minimum, such a recollection could remind us of how far we have already strayed.

Tags:
Democratic Party,
2012 presidential election,
Republican Party

Reader Comments Read all comments (11)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

R.L. Schaefer of CA:

There are a variety of perceptions on what makes a good president, so it is best to research ALL sides of a topic, to "check out proven", ethical websites, and read sites of journalists of integrity, before coming up with all manner of startling remarks. Most importantly, if someone makes a remark, such as did R.L Schaefer of CA:

"No one proves your point so well as our glib, tap dancing, sound bite spewing, bobbing and weaving, bumper sticker slogan spouting, buck passing, Huckster in Chief - The Amazing Empty "O" Man."

...we may have to ask ourselves what kind of meaningful research is R.L of C.A. doing, and why he supposes that name-calling solves ANY of America's problems? This may be R. L,'s actual opinion of President Obama, and he has the right to his opinion, but I never thought the United States of America could be so ridden with those who have not even tried to learn the truth. Do you notice that truth-tellers in the media do not use name-calling as a form of communication?

If an American citizen is cheated out of his or her right to learn the truth about American government and their politicians, how do we know just which politicians are saying and doing the right thing and which politicians are not? The success of Democracy is dependent on all citizens telling and learning the truth when it comes to our Constitutional Right to vote for the BEST candidates. You may form any opinion you choose, but is Democracy important enough for all American citizens to demand truth from those who "profess" to tell us the official news about politics, politicians, and government policies and activities in and on our media: newspapers, magazines, books, radio, television, in-person informational text, including political speeches; recordings, written text, online blogs, and any forms of media I may have forgotten to prints.

The Website, "Sienna Research Institute" is made up of historians who research the primary documents of current and former Presidents of the U.S. These historians have excellent research credentials to prove what each President has accomplished (and not accomplished) on behalf of American Citizens).

Interesting Articles about Truth-tellers:

http://www.thenation.com/article/journalists-truth-tellers

http://www.iwatchnews.org/Sienna Research Institute:

http://www.nationaljournal.com/how-historians-rank-the-presidents-20110219

Obama's Promises:

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/obameter/rulings/promise-kept/

http://planetpov.com/2011/02/13/a-short-list-of-pres-obamas-accomplishments/

ann keenan of MI 9:09PM October 21, 2011

R.L. Schaefer of CA:

There are a variety of perceptions on what makes a good president, so it is best to research ALL sides of a topic, to "check out proven", ethical websites, and read sites of journalists of integrity, before coming up with all manner of startling remarks. Most importantly, if someone makes a remark, such as did R.L Schaefer of CA:

"No one proves your point so well as our glib, tap dancing, sound bite spewing, bobbing and weaving, bumper sticker slogan spouting, buck passing, Huckster in Chief - The Amazing Empty "O" Man."

...we may have to ask ourselves what kind of meaningful research is R.L of C.A. doing, and why he supposes that name-calling solves ANY of America's problems? This may be R. L,'s actual opinion of President Obama, and he has the right to his opinion, but I never thought the United States of America could be so ridden with those who have not even tried to learn the truth. Do you notice that truth-tellers in the media do not use name-calling as a form of communication?

If an American citizen is cheated out of his or her right to learn the truth about American government and their politicians, how do we know just which politicians are saying and doing the right thing and which politicians are not? The success of Democracy is dependent on all citizens telling and learning the truth when it comes to our Constitutional Right to vote for the BEST candidates. You may form any opinion you choose, but is Democracy important enough for all American citizens to demand truth from those who "profess" to tell us the official news about politics, politicians, and government policies and activities in and on our media: newspapers, magazines, books, radio, television, in-person informational text, including political speeches; recordings, written text, online blogs, and any forms of media I may have forgotten to prints.

The Website, "Sienna Research Institute" is made up of historians who research the primary documents of current and former Presidents of the U.S. These historians have excellent research credentials to prove what each President has accomplished (and not accomplished) on behalf of American Citizens).

Interesting Articles about Truth-tellers:

http://www.thenation.com/article/journalists-truth-tellers

http://www.iwatchnews.org/Sienna Research Institute:

http://www.nationaljournal.com/how-historians-rank-the-presidents-20110219

Obama's Promises:

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/obameter/rulings/promise-kept/

http://planetpov.com/2011/02/13/a-short-list-of-pres-obamas-accomplishments/

ann keenan of MI 9:08PM October 21, 2011

Many people are buzzing about an article at truthout.org by one Mike Lofgren, a longtime Republican staff aide on Capitol Hill who just couldn’t take the crazy anymore, left his job, and produced this buzzy (and quite well-written) lamentation about his party’s tactics and goals. If you haven’t read it, you must

The Lofgren piece is full of harsh observations and accusations, but here’s just a little sampling:

• The debt-ceiling debate was an act of “political terrorism,” in which the GOP concocted a crisis and used it to ensure that the party's unprecedented demands were met. He writes: “Everyone knows that in a hostage situation, the reckless and amoral actor has the negotiating upper hand over the cautious and responsible actor because the latter is actually concerned about the life of the hostage, while the former does not care.”

• The August FAA reauthorization fight was another instance such of hostage-taking: “Republicans were willing to lay off 4,000 Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees, 70,000 private construction workers, and let FAA safety inspectors work without pay, in fact, forcing them to pay for their own work-related travel—how prudent is that?—in order to strong arm some union-busting provisions into the FAA reauthorization.”

• The GOP plan to discredit government in the people’s eyes is very conscious: “A couple of years ago, a Republican committee staff director told me candidly (and proudly) what the method was to all this obstruction and disruption. Should Republicans succeed in obstructing the Senate from doing its job, it would further lower Congress's generic favorability rating among the American people. By sabotaging the reputation of an institution of government, the party that is programmatically against government would come out the relative winner.”

• As for belief as opposed to tactics, the party basically really cares only about the rich. Actually, Lofgren doesn’t say “basically.” He says “solely and exclusively.” And he explains how they’ve camouflaged this with talk of protecting small businesses and so on.

There is much, much more. He’s not very happy either about his party’s militarism, its cynical use of religion, its total opposition to doing anything about the environment, and other matters, but most

programs so they will be there in the future."

Eggman of CO 6:43PM September 06, 2011

advertisement

Latest Videos

Thomas Jefferson Street Blog

IRS, AP and Benghazi Show the Failure of Obama's Big Government

Giving an inefficient organization like the IRS more responsibility makes it more likely to screw up, not better able to solve this nation’s problems.

Coburn Wants Oklahoma Tornado Aid Offset With Budget Cuts

Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn wants spending cuts before aid is sent to tornado victims in his own state.

Crowdfunding Zack Braff's Film And Robert Griffin's Gifts Is a Mistake

Rich people don't need donations from the public.

Poll Shows Americans Find Obama's IRS Story Barely Believable

There is still something fishy about the scandal at the IRS.

Do Benghazi, AP and IRS Scandals Reflect Obama’s Leadership Style?

It may be that a flawed leadership style is filtering down to the rest of the government.

In Marine Umbrella Incident, Republicans Still Deny Obama Is President

Umbrellagate is more proof that Obama's critics cannot acknowledge that he is, indeed, president.

Obama Isn't Nixon, but Needs More Friends in Washington

President Barack Obama needs to make more friends in Washington.

Republicans Can't Forget the Economy During Obama Scandals

Scandals provide good fodder for the GOP, but it can't forget about fixing unemployment.

advertisement